Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Guest Post: David Litwack

Daughter3DThe Daughter of the Sea and the Sky by David Litwack has launched! This fabulous title is available now on all online retailers and in your local book stores. You aren't going to want to miss this new literary journey exploring the clash between reason and faith, and the power of hope and love.

The Book

After centuries of religiously motivated war, the world has been split in two. Now the Blessed Lands are ruled by pure faith, while in the Republic, reason is the guiding light—two different realms, kept apart and at peace by a treaty and an ocean. Summary: A mysterious nine-year-old from the Blessed Lands sails into the lives of a couple in the Republic, claiming to be the Daughter of the Sea and the Sky. Is she a troubled child longing to return home, or a powerful prophet sent to unravel the fabric of the Republic? The answer will change the lives of all she meets… and perhaps their world as well. Author: David Litwack Genre: Fantasy/Speculative Literary Fiction Publisher: Evolved Publishing

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Guest Post - The Greatest Thing I Learned in School

In the seventh grade, I began a six year college preparatory school, the elite school in the city and accessible only via an entrance exam. Ninety-nine percent of its graduates went on to college, many to Ivy League schools. But only one in three graduated. I felt pretty confident. I had a good education to date and all the skills to succeed. But I had never read for pleasure. The kids in this school were very competitive—what we used to call “grade grubbers”—even at such a young age.


On the first day of English class, our teacher, Dr. McNamara, hit us with a stern warning. We were all failing and would get an ‘F.’ No studying would help, no exam would change it. There was only one way we could improve our grade. Dr. McNamara was a bear of a man, with a big round face, jowls and the almost expected wire-rimmed bifocals. He glared at us through them and drew us all to the edge of our seat. “For each book you read,” he said, “I will raise you one grade. If you read five books in the term, you will get an ‘A.’” Our marking term was one month long. I suspect none of us read that much in six months. But then, like a magic salve to the wound, he handed out “the list.” The list consisted of about three hundred wonderful books, and not the stodgy classics, all of them books to delight the young.

That year I read the complete works of Sherlock Holmes and wanted to be a detective. I read The Saga of Andy Burnett and dreamed of running off to become a mountain man. I read The Lord of the Rings and pictured myself as the ranger, Strider, and someday, if I was worthy, king of the men of Numenor. I was twelve years old. Of course I never become any of these, but I’d been given the lifelong gift of reading and have never stopped. The most important thing I learned? Through books, I could experience other worlds, be in the minds of other people. And though fiction may never translate directly to reality, I learned something even more important—the power of possibility. David Litwack, author of There Comes a Prophet, Along the Watchtower, and The Daughter of the Sea and the Sky www.davidlitwack.com

The Giveaway

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The Tour

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3 comments:

  1. That's good material to motivate students!

    Congratulations on the release, David.

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  2. As a teacher, I thought that was a great idea as well. I know I would definitely have received a great mark in that class. LOL

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  3. We had a similar, but much easier assignment in my 10th grade English class. We were given a list of books to choose from and had to read two during the whole school year (9ish months). Of course, they were all books geared towards getting teens excited about reading - easy reads that you couldn't put down. I think by the time I finished high school, I'd read about half the list, going back through it to pick something out every time I was ready to read.

    Michelle @ In Media Res

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